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Government consultation hears women in workplace under-report harassment for fear of retaliation

Through a number of public consultations, the federal government has heard evidence suggesting the fear of retaliation is keeping some Canadians from reporting sexual harassment in the workplace.

Federal government looking at solutions following year-long consultations with public, employers, stakeholders

Patty Hajdu, Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Labour said, 'Harassment and sexual violence in workplaces are under-reported, often due to a fear of retaliation, and that when they are reported, they are not dealt with effectively.' (Jeff McIntosh/Canadian Press)

Through a number of public consultations, the federal government has heard evidence suggesting the fear of retaliation is keeping some Canadians from reportingsexual harassment in the workplace.

And when those incidents are reported, the workers said that often, the situations were "not dealt with effectively."

This anecdotalevidence isjust one of the findings that emerged from ayear-long public consultationcommissioned by the Ministry of Employment, Workforce developmentand Labour.

The document summarizes what departmental officials were told during theconsultations, which tookthe form of an online survey, and a series of discussions with employers, labour groupsand stakeholders.

The government has made a point of noting thatthe responses from the online surveyare not representative of the entire Canadian population, sincerespondents self-selected to take part.

"We know that these incidents have profound negative effects, such as harming workers' health and safety, increasing absenteeism, and costs for employers," wrote Patty Hajdu, the minister overseeing the consultations.

The department plans to use the informationto shape its strategy to eliminate harassment,sexual harassment, and violence in the workplace.

"Canadians responding to our online survey told us that harassment and sexual violence in workplaces are under-reported, often due to a fear of retaliation, and that when they are reported, they are not dealt with effectively," Haidju wrote in the report'sopening message.

The document goes on to offer a limited, yet bleak snapshot of life onthe job for some Canadians.

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"Harassment was the most common type of behaviour experienced by online survey respondents a full60 per cent reported having experienced it. Thirty per cent of respondents said they they had experienced sexual harassment, 21 per cent that they had experienced violence and 3 percent that they had experienced sexual violence," the report says.

The online survey was open to the public for just a short window,between Feb. 14andMarch9of this year, with nearly 1,350 valid responses collected. The majority of respondents werewomen, between the ages of 35-49. Some of the questions were partially open-endedto allowparticipants to "fully express their views."

Abacus poll

In a separate poll published Tuesday, Abacus Data asked Canadians whether women are sexually harassed in their workplace. Fifty-six per cent of women surveyed said yes, with 12 per cent of those saying it happens often and 44 per cent saying it occurs infrequently.

The same poll found that 53 per cent of Canadian women who took part in the survey have experienced unwanted sexual pressure. Broken down by age, women aged 30 to 44 experienced this problem the most with64 per cent saying the behaviour happens in their workplace.

When it comes to the consequences for such behaviour, 77per cent of the womensaid they believed the harassers faced none.

"One thing is clear in these results millions of Canadian men and women say they witness this problem, and say there are rarely sanctions to punish inappropriate behaviour and to help protect women," said pollsterBruce Anderson, of the findings.

The Abacussurvey asked a random sample of 1,500 panelists aged 18 and over,who were selected from a large representative sample of more than 500,000 Canadians, to completethe online surveybetween Oct.20-23. The margin of error for a comparable probability-based random sample of 1,500 is plus or minus 2.5 per cent, 19 times out of 20.

Reporting obstacles

Half of the respondents to the federal government's public consultation said harassment or violence came from an individual in a position of authority, while 44 per cent of respondents said the abuse wasperpetratedby a co-worker.

"Respondents who experienced sexual harassment tended to work in environments with a higher ration of men inpositions of power," the document says.

Of therespondents who did come forward to report their experiences, 75 per cent said they faced challenges when trying to resolve the issues, including a supervisor not taking the complaint seriously, or retaliation from individuals in positions of authority.

The most common reasons for workers to not report an incident includedfear of retaliation, fear of a complaint hurting career advancement, or concern the worker could end up losing their job.

Stakeholders alsotold the government there is a "needto recognize harassment as an ongoing pattern of inappropriate conduct."

"Similarly, most online survey respondents who reported that they have experienced harassment, sexual harassment or violence in the past two years, indicated that they experienced these behaviours more than once," the document states.

Suggested solutions

Employersand stakeholders, which includedlabour organizations and advocacy groups,put forward a range of suggestions on ways to reduce harassment and sexual harassment in the workplace.

"There is a need to raise awareness among employers and employees of their rights and obligations regarding harassment and violence," the consultation says.

"Training and education would help employers to understand and respond to what is happening in their workplaces," is listed as one suggestion.

On top of beefing up training and education policies, stakeholders and employees suggested that when an incident happens, information "must be collected and shared with a central body, such as the government."

Still, some employers raised concernabout how much new measures could cost, particularly for small businesses.

With files from CBC's Peter Zimonjic